Keywords
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKLITERATURE
ADULT LITERACY
PEER REVIEW
TRAINING FINANCE
DIPLOMAS
VOCATIONAL EDUCATION
LABOR MARKET CHARACTERISTICS
TRAINERS
GROSS ENROLLMENT RATES
TECHNICAL TRAINING
DISTANCE LEARNING
TRAINING ACTIVITIES
YOUNG PEOPLE
TRAINING SYSTEMS
BASIC EDUCATION
SKILL REQUIREMENTS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
POPULATION GROWTH
GOODS & SERVICES
LED
GROSS ENROLLMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
TRAINING NEEDS
BUDGETING ACHIEVEMENT
PARTICIPATION RATES
TECHNICAL EDUCATION
AIDS EPIDEMIC
TRAINING INSTITUTES
TRAINING INSTITUTIONS
TRAINEES
TRAINING COSTS
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
CASE STUDIES
RESOURCE MOBILIZATION
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
SECONDARY EDUCATION
TECHNICAL COLLEGES
HOUSEHOLDS
LABOR MARKETS
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
TRAINING POLICIES
TRAINING FUNDS
TRAINING INVESTMENTS
COUNTRY CASE STUDIES
OWNERSHIP
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
TRAINING PROVIDERS
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
INSTRUCTORS
LEARNING PROCESS
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
NEW ENTRANTS
TRAINING MARKETS
DRAWING
EFFICIENCY
APPRENTICESHIP TRAINING
VOUCHERS
POVERTY ANALYSIS
SCHOOLS
TECHNICAL TRAINING
LABOR FORCE
ADULT EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT
LABOR DEMAND INFORMATION
TRAINING CENTERS
QUALITY
INFORMAL ECONOMY
INCOME ANALYSIS
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
YOUTH
VOCATIONAL SKILLS
SKILLS TRAINING
FINANCING
EMPLOYMENT
INDUSTRIAL TRAINING
PROGRAMS
APPRENTICESHIP
ENROLLMENT
EDUCATIONAL PLANNING
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15028Abstract
The review addresses a list of questions that seem especially pertinent for skills development in Sub-Saharan Africa today, namely: What should be the role of training when there is not enough modern sector employment? Given the widespread decay in public training systems, what should be the role of the public sector in training? Are private training providers more cost-effective than public sector training providers? What is the capacity of private training providers to fill the gap left by declining public investment in training? What is the relative importance of training within enterprises and does the state need to intervene to stimulate it? In view of shortages of public financing, how can needed skills development be financed? What role can financing mechanisms play in improving the effectiveness and efficiency of training? Answers to these questions and others developed in each chapter are pursued by looking over the past decade at the structure of employment and the demand for skills; the experience of government and non-government providers of skills training, including enterprises; and the experience with financing of TVET and resource management. The findings yield a clear, strategic role for governments to play in skills development while deepening sector reforms. The actions, if taken, promise to support achievement of the Millennium Development Goals for poverty reduction and Education for All.Date
2004Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/150280-8213-5680-1
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15028
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Education, Training and Labor Market Outcomes for Youth in IndonesiaWorld Bank (World Bank, 2012-03-19)This report is part of the Analytical
 and Advisory Activities (AAA) program focusing on the
 engagement area of 'skills development,
 competitiveness, and knowledge economy' and is based on
 several background papers and technical notes written on the
 characteristics of youth employment and the role of
 education and skills in the school-to-work transition in
 Indonesia. The slow transition of graduates is explored in
 detail in section two, which pays special attention to
 differences by education levels. It highlights the
 difficulties of senior secondary school graduates in
 accessing good quality jobs and the high unemployment rate
 that they face upon graduation. Given these worrisome signs
 of young senior secondary school graduates (considered the
 lower tier of 'skilled' workers) and expected
 increases in the transition to senior secondary education
 (which are already rising rapidly), section three focuses on
 the senior secondary school level. Seeking to shed some
 light on the question of whether senior secondary education
 is providing the right skills for its students, the section
 explores the employment profile of vocational (SMK) vs.
 general (SMA) graduates and, drawing on a recent survey of
 employers, argues against a drastic increase in the
 proportion of vocational students, highlighting instead the
 need to adjust the skill base of senior secondary school
 graduates. Based on the findings, section four explores ways
 to meet the demand for skills through changes in senior
 secondary school, strengthening of the non-formal training
 system and providing targeted entrepreneurship programs.
 Finally, section five provides some overall recommendations
 going forward.
-
Demand and Supply of Skills in Ghana : How Can Training Programs Improve Employment?Darvas, Peter; Palmer, Robert (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2014-07-08)Ghana has a youthful population of 24
 million and has shown impressive gains in economic growth
 and in poverty reduction over the last two decades. The
 necessary sustained growth requires three critical steps:
 (1) increase productivity in the strategic economic sectors,
 (2) diversify the economy, and (3) expand employment.
 Raising the level and range of skills in the country
 provides a key contribution to these core drivers of
 sustained growth. Skills development in Ghana encompasses
 foundational skills (literacy, numeracy), transferable and
 soft skills, and technical and vocational skills. These
 skills are acquired throughout life through formal
 education, training, and higher education; on the job
 through work experience and professional training; through
 family and community; and via the media. This report focuses
 on one segment of Ghana s skills development system: formal
 and informal technical and vocational education and training
 (TVET) at the pre-tertiary level. Although TVET alone does
 not guarantee productivity gains or job creation, it is
 generally agreed that a blend of cognitive, non-cognitive,
 intermediate, and higher technical skills is crucial to
 enhance the country s competitiveness and contribute to
 social inclusion, acceptable employment, and the alleviation
 of poverty. The public financing approach and general lack
 of incentives to improve TVET in Ghana help to perpetuate a
 supply-driven, low-quality skills system that responds very
 poorly to the needs of the economy, and especially its
 growth sectors. The national skills strategy should aim to
 complement, and be complemented by, reforms that are
 underway in related sectors (for example, private sector
 development and employment, the informal economy,
 information and communication technologies, and
 agriculture). One of the more innovative elements of the
 ongoing reform has been the establishment of sustainable
 financing for the skills development fund (SDF). Channeling
 the majority of TVET resources through a SDF will make it
 easier for funds to be allocated in line with general
 national socioeconomic priorities and specific priorities
 identified by Council for Technical and Vocational Education
 and Training (COTVET).
-
Study on Skills Development for the Informal Sector of the Nigerian EconomyNigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research (World Bank, Ibadan, Nigeria, 2017-09-06)The problems of employment have become a
 central global concern in recent times. This makes nearly
 all the governments and development partners to be fully
 engaged in finding a lasting solution to the problems. In
 the past, development planning efforts were concentrated on
 the development of a modern industrial sector. It was
 believed that this would serve the domestic market and
 facilitate the absorption of redundant or surplus workers in
 the urban economy. It was also the belief that rapid
 economic growth and development would be achieved. The study
 is structured into five chapters. While chapter one looks at
 the background to the study, the terms of reference and the
 structure of the report, chapter two focuses on copious
 relevant literature on skills development bringing out the
 conceptual definitions, theoretical and empirical issues in
 the informal sector of the economy. Chapter three presents
 the methodology of how training providers as well as the
 beneficiaries of the programs were surveyed in the study.
 Chapter four gives the inventory of the programs for the
 informal sector skills development and a detailed analysis
 of five most important non- state-run programs in the
 country. Chapter five forms the conclusions and
 recommendations of the work.